Black Man Killed by Officer in Alabama Mall Shooting Was Not the Gunman, Police Now Say

An Alabama police officer fatally shot a 21-year-old black man on Thursday evening who the police stated shot at the very least one individual at a mall close to Birmingham, turning a Thanksgiving vacation procuring scene into chaos.

But on Friday the police stated proof means that the man truly was not the gunman and that the true gunman remained at giant.

The Hoover Police Department stated on Twitter that the man who was killed, Emantic Fitzgerald Bradford Jr., “may have been involved in some aspect” of an altercation at the mall, the Riverchase Galleria in Hoover, Ala., that preceded the taking pictures.

But, they stated, he “likely did not fire the rounds” that struck an 18-year-old man as they’d initially indicated. Another sufferer, a 12-year-old lady, was an “innocent bystander,” the police stated. Both have been hospitalized however their circumstances on Saturday have been unavailable.

“We regret that our initial media release was not totally accurate, but new evidence indicates that it was not,” the police stated, including that the conclusion was based mostly on interviews with witnesses and “critical evidentiary items.”

Mr. Bradford’s mother, April Pipkins, said in an interview on Saturday that Mr. Bradford was living with her near Birmingham where he had been raised. Mr. Bradford, who was better known as E.J., would not have been involved in the shooting, and might have been trying to protect other people in the mall, she said.

“That was not his character at all,” she said. “He loved life, and he loved people.”

He was licensed to carry a firearm, she said. Alabama generally does not prohibit people from carrying firearms in public, according to the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence.

Anthony Thomas, Mr. Bradford’s uncle, said he wanted the police to release all the videos from the mall that day.

“He was an honorable young man who was assassinated,” Mr. Thomas said.

Ms. Pipkins is being represented by Benjamin L. Crump, a Tallahassee, Fla., lawyer, who has in the past represented the families of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and Tamir Rice.

Mr. Crump said the Hoover police had tarnished Mr. Bradford’s character by “jumping to conclusions” that he was a criminal because he was a black man with a gun.

“He was trying to be somebody who helped save people, yet he was killed,” Mr. Crump said.

Capt. Gregg Rector, a spokesman for the Hoover Police Department, said on Saturday that it would be inappropriate to answer questions about the circumstances around Mr. Bradford’s death because the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency was leading the investigation.

The Hoover Police Department is, however, conducting an internal investigation into Mr. Bradford’s killing by the officer. That officer, who has not been identified, has been put on administrative leave until the investigation is complete. Captain Rector did not answer other questions about the officer on Saturday.

The Alabama Law Enforcement Agency declined to comment on Saturday and said that it would issue a statement on Sunday.

The episode on Thursday sent crowds of people running through the Riverchase Galleria, about 10 miles south of Birmingham, according to videos posted on Twitter.

One shopper told the television station WBRC that she was buying jewelry at a kiosk when she heard three bangs and people started screaming and running for the exits as officers ran toward the gunfire.

The police said they now believe that more than two people were involved in the altercation that preceded the shooting and that at least one gunman remains at large. The police did not release a description of the person they were seeking.

The mall, whose website boasts that it is “the largest enclosed shopping center in Alabama,” had advertised special hours for the night of Thanksgiving: 6 p.m. to midnight. The Brookfield Properties Retail Group, which owns the mall, did not respond to requests for comment on Saturday.